Bucket aggregations don’t calculate metrics over fields like the metrics aggregations do, but instead, they create
buckets of documents. Each bucket is associated with a criterion (depending on the aggregation type) which determines
whether or not a document in the current context "falls" into it. In other words, the buckets effectively define document
sets. In addition to the buckets themselves, the bucket aggregations also compute and return the number of documents
that "fell into" each bucket.

Bucket aggregations, as opposed to metrics aggregations, can hold sub-aggregations. These sub-aggregations will be
aggregated for the buckets created by their "parent" bucket aggregation.

There are different bucket aggregators, each with a different "bucketing" strategy. Some define a single bucket, some
define fixed number of multiple buckets, and others dynamically create the buckets during the aggregation process.

The maximum number of buckets allowed in a single response is limited by a dynamic cluster
setting named search.max_buckets. It defaults to 10,000, requests that try to return more than
the limit will fail with an exception.